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tv   [untitled]    November 18, 2012 3:30am-4:00am EST

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transit moscow fans have gone on since around two thousand and eight they've been at a high level at that time there was a banner that was placed at a game in st petersburg that was questionable got fans upset and more recently in september between a game between a torpedo and there was a similar incident with fireworks being thrown onto the field but much more so at that time and in the same month you know my friends then attacked their own headquarters saying that if the team doesn't play better that they will start destroying property as well so there's a big problem basically between a football fans and the teams that they supposedly support with their actions at this point in time or being more disruptive to the game than being helpful. as of now there are no laws in russia that are designed to protect football teams or to punish fans right now that is being talked about as a possibility in the near future. the first to have a public vote in england and wales for local police commissioners took place this week at the same time as morale among the nation's law enforcers appears to be at
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rock bottom and recent poll of offices suggested that almost every single one of them felt abandoned by the government. why the same blue line. another day another demo and the police always on hand to keep control but while the boys and girls in blue do their jobs sometimes it impossible conditions the government is reducing their budget by a massive twenty percent the net result more all in the force hits an all time low with just fifteen out of fourteen thousand officers saying they feel the government gives them a great deal of support rachel baines is surprised but not in a good way. to say their finances are certainly in the force i work in lancashire and i don't know of any offices that fill up being supported by the government really is at rock bottom baines has lost five hundred fifty officers from her force
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meaning more work for those left behind and a genuine fear that when people call nine nine nine there won't be anyone left to deal with the emergency and she's not alone so i'm in pain is chair of the warrick ship police federation and says morale hasn't been this low in his twenty six year career we have a plethora of issues over the last two years where the star or conditions of service pension reforms or were thought forms in the police. training percent cuts and if i give an example here in work prior to this government coming to power we had a thousand and fifty offices we're now down into the seven hundreds we have one of the biggest mightily networks in the country and we have no traffic department. so it's coming from all sides times are so hard in war that the force is even selling off it stations including its h.q.
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there's no for sale boards up here but the iconic scotland yard headquarters of the metropolitan police is also on the markets if the real turnaround is just. years ago they met with trumpeting a three million pound refurbish it was revolving starting now it's downsizing to a new size of the ten most nearby and replacing smaller stations with counters in supermarkets and communities that. the force feels it's being disproportionately targeted but home secretary to reason may is on repentant let's stop pretending the police are being picked on they do feel picked on and critically powerless to protect themselves as legally the police aren't allowed to strike but that could change in february we are seeing everyone can fall off the rank of chief inspector in england wales and that very question do they want full industry rights and and
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the reason is important. our members need protecting from what they perceive is an unfair treatment by. a police force on strike it's the last thing the government needs particularly as it stares another winter of discontent in the face laura smith r.t. london. it's emerged this week that pakistan could be developing its own armed drones as has been frustrated with the high numbers of civilians and soldiers american aircraft in the country and says it could target militants more effectively but draw is only part of the problem when it comes to pakistan's anger over washington's policies such as one of ours former ambassador to the us. strikes are taken very very negatively in fact the unpopularity of the
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us in pakistan there are many of these of but one of the fundamental reasons is new drug the pakistani people don't like that do you wish to come into pakistan. and this upset and this is more talk about leverage and i think the issue of trade is more political and people like us to come in to. solve an energy it would be ordered to of pakistanis. there. are huge breaks the u.s. gives us monetary support. and funding overall in terms of. in terms of manpower and from different. if. it's been a colossal clock and more than that we have it is in the country in our favor to go
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before the nine eleven because her daughter over there but due to this terrorism particularly in the private and the rest so we have suffered hugely. and the full interview with the former pakistani ambassador to washington and mahmud ali durrani is coming up in just under ten minutes here on out. it's over a year ago now says the occupy wall street blossomed as a protest movement against corporate greed in the u.s. they campaign has suffered major obstacles to get its message across including harsh quantiles by the authorities but now as i say trick and explains activists are trying out more crazy ways to be had. an artist carving out his college debt number and walks over seventy thousand dollars from columbia and for a masters of fine arts and award winning actress teaching
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a class at the new york film academy what happens when you intensely focus on an object and to form a wall street employee volunteering and post hurricane sandy relief efforts do you know the name of your driver what could they possibly have in common their support for the occupy wall street movement. from day one of occupy the widow wings of the american dream and now from his brooklyn studio facing wall street know a fisher and organizer of occupier museums wants to redefine the meaning of money the other side of this sort of america's sublime dream is you know all this and kind of lack of opportunity that we're starting to see you know it's no displays his work in shows all over the world trying to generate discussion about how an artist's work effect society had really you know been affected by the two thousand economic crash in the our world. is just as much as on wall street or in any other
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kind of world as a very sort of go of yourself mentality right now and i think the society is breaking apart because of that i'm living in the slice of the life i used to have lunch baker contributed to occupied by starring in an independent film as the wife of ponzi schemer bernie madoff now in jail for one hundred fifty years the film ruth made off occupies wall street highlights wealth inequality through humor in this case risk made off even in the middle of zuccotti park would be concerned about things that only the one percent could possibly be concerned about blanche believes occupy gave voice to a majority that wasn't heard before there has to be some kind of a new model going forward where this kind of economic disparity is. dealt with in a way that benefits everyone you can't sweep it under the carpet and in-or it anymore . after seven years at morgan stanley alexis goldstein could no longer tolerate the
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greed and toxicity of wall street she quit and is now an author and an occupy organizer on wall street there's this attitude if you get screwed by somebody it's because you are stupid optimal poker playing is take your best friend for all they're worth the same is true on the street. the occupy wall street movement started as an ocean of people on the streets and in camps and that tactic of holding public spaces the police have made it at least for the seeable future impossible we've kind of adapted in this way where we're organizing more specific themes. themes that could be while on the way to bringing much more tangible results. like hurricane relief occupy has been praised for doing a better job of the government agency feel as well as projects like strike debt well as many as one in seven americans are pounded by debt collectors occupies raising money to try to abolish that debt burden for as many people as they can by
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buying distressed debt for pennies on the dollar and then wiping it out. the crowds may be gone from the streets but those fighting for the ninety nine percent continue working by themselves and in groups to put an end to the world of the powerful beating down on the voiceless and to try to build a socially responsible community and. new york. and up next as promised as our interview with pakistani former ambassador to the us. remains in this tree even for specialists how a voice can produce several sounds it warms the to do the means the art of throat singing comes naturally picked up like
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a language. a language of communicating with nature it said that's where throat singing originates from the unions believe not only animals but also all surrounding objects like reverse forests and even stones souls imitating the sounds they believe assumes to capture the power of nature. was. there are special instruments that accompany the singing give gainey says there is even a legend about his instrument a gill it says once there lived a poor shefford who had the best horse that won every competition but jealous people killed it on the horse was revived as an instrument. or was it of stopping a fall is because of the spirit of the horse coming to his dream he said make an
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instrument from a tree the sounding board from the leather of my face the strings. and to remember me make an engraving of my head part of the instrument he did so i called the instrument again which means come back and this melody only instrument is called. to fly as one of the most famous groups in the republic there. next goal is to tour broad they say for you are peons it's difficult to pick up and sing so i asked them to teach me and see if i can do it. cheerleader and there were. no you. can. get. but now to be part of the
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song and not the actual through thing which i wouldn't even try to refute. so maybe you have to be born here to be able to sing like this i thought so until i met small chooks like it vini and i don't even speak their language but she is from japan. most sense to me. from two hundred years ago until sappy here she's not planning a professional singing career she keeps practicing just because it's become part of her nature. i want to enjoy why pakistan's former ambassador to the united states who also used
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to be the national security advisor to the prime minister mr mahmud ali durrani sir thank you very much for coming here pleasure the united states started the war on terror back in two thousand and one now international forces are expected to pour out by two thousand and fourteen and many do ask the question is this a sign of victory or defeat well it's certainly not. i think. the way they went in your get because they had i don't tend they succeeded in. reaching their objectives in fact when i was a massacre in washington number of years back i said that the way you're going you're not going to succeed and the tragedy is that you will make us the fall guy and i think today in your opinion what was the purpose of this whole operation and why are you leaving now well the purpose was to defeat the taliban and remove them and initially they did succeed and removing the taliban from kabul but
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evidently they had not studied the history of of one instant and they didn't realize that they had vanished survived and came back and the taliban. today i think if you look at a couple of indicators you looked at the rate of the garbage. you see how much law and order did this and of what. you see how popular of the government that. is their freedom of movement is their development has the poppy production gone down has begun turning gone down you take any indicator. they have not succeeded this brings us to the next question since well al qaeda has been largely defeated perhaps in afghanistan by the taliban store there it's actually aiming now to become a political force also and the terrorist network is on the rise so after the alliance
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has gone who will be there to stand up to the terrorists well that's a very difficult question. one needs to nation is very fractured. on ethnic lines you know do not separate the west to separate east to separate and the south which is essentially but population. separate homewood unity if there were other whom would unity but at least they were working together that's over there is i believe going to be a lot of problem after the u.s. troops paying twenty fourteen and there is going to be turmoil and. there's a great probability that the taliban will become do strongest group and of understand let's focus on pakistan for a moment just recently was saw a huge wave of anti-american protests in the muslim world caused by this anti muslim film made in the united states also pakistanis i have already been outraged
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by the recent needle strike which killed pakistani soldiers and we also constantly hear about drones which don't only kill terrorists but also just ordinary pakistani ans is this too big of a price that pakistan he'd back in two thousand and one when it became an ally of the united states well it's a matter of opinion but. the majority of pakistanis do free there they have a huge place the u.s. gives us monetary support and funding but overall in terms of. in terms of manpower in turn don't do for infrastructure and wear and tear of military equipment if you all work it out it's been a colossal lot of pakistan and more than that and we have terrorism in the country
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in our tribal area before nine eleven we had no issues we had no terrorism but no there is terrorism particularly in the tribal area and the rest of pakistan so we have suffered hugely it's widely believed that terrorists in afghanistan often operate from their bases in pakistan to what extent does the pakistani elite sympathize with the terrorists well i think. pakistani elite does nor sympathize with the taliban and this is also a bit if you could put up a wall between india and saudi between pakistan and afghanistan on the dude in plain afghanistan will still remain unstable i think there is enough space in of one is done to create problems. for the i said forces so yes there is limited element of people who cross the border from pakistan and create trouble
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but i would say that did not more than five percent ten percent saying that all the trouble that is another one is done emanate from pakistan that is totally false so with the taliban now being an example of a terrorist movement which is going political now. can this be viewed as a tendency in the region well i'm not too sure about that but develop political thoughts before nine eleven if you remember the taliban were ruling of understand they were the people running the country so devoid of a political force then they've started fighting against what they considered as a foreign invader and. unfortunately they seem to have won out because america has lost appetite to fight anymore there are doubts that after the alliance with draws from of grandstanding taliban won't be able to fulfill this power vacuum
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what sort of threats including security threats does this create for pakistan i think for you to probably drank that they will not be able to resolve. the issues of understand there are many and they're very entrenched problems and the taliban themselves may not be able to resolve the problem but that is that this video understanding that possibly they may form the government i'm not sure about that but hypothetically let's say they form the got but what happens to pakistan i think pakistan will have a problem because the year of one taliban are going to support the fact that he. thought quite honestly the pakistani average person doesn't want a taliban type of a government in pakistan so this is support our taliban which is not good for our health so should pakistan reconcile with the taliban or aim to weaken it and well
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pakistan i'm sorry if you read what's happening in pakistan nearly heart of our army and we have a fairly large army nearly half our army is deployed today in fighting the inside. see. pakistan is doing the best that it can you so you have to understand the capability you're part no you look at of one is. about much smaller area and you have the top. military forces operating there and they have not been able to defeat the taliban why does the world expect miracles from pakistan on a much weaker country we are trying our best we've had the maximum military and civilian casualties so we are doing our best it this is a wrong notion that pakistan is as they say hunting down home
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then running with the hare you know this is this is pakistan educated yes there was a time when pakistan supported the taliban government in afghanistan that is true it's not hated but i think we made a turnaround and we supported the u.s. and we won't invade them together in this fight. but the impression that the world is getting is that pakistan you know the elite as you said in pakistan is supporting the taliban that is not true let's picture when the alliance leaves of aniston and if the security situation deteriorates or do you see drone strikes in certain intensifying well. it's a possibility that the drone troops will intensify yes but how is this viewed in general in pakistan variables that are going in pakistan be drawn strikes are taken very very negatively in fact the unpopularity of the u.s.
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in pakistan is one of the there are many reasons but one of the fundamental reasons is the drone strike you know everybody says that don't strikes. cause a lot of collateral damage. i personally feel that the drones are very accurate concision weapons because unilateral sorry damage one cannot prevent many but not so much the issue is more of some value to the pakistani people don't like that the us has come into pakistan bomb aided years and this object that this is more although we talk about collateral damage but i think the issue of drone strikes is more political and people don't like the us to come into our territory while a sovereign entity what's your view now is the relationship between pakistan and
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the united states lloyd well unfortunately it is at its lowest. i've been pakistan's ambassador to washington while i was the it was my effort to do my best to improve relations between pakistan and us but unfortunately the time and. america are suffering losses and have won a stanley are becoming the fall guy and relationships. look how is the war on terror viewed by the pakistanis themselves to the see americans as fighting a common enemy or what's what's your take on that we have allies and we have a common agenda to defeat the extremists but it's sad that in spite of having a common agenda a common enemy actually does the first kind of minor history that the u.s. and pakistan has
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a common agenda to defeat the taliban but yet in spite of that the mistrust is so deep between the two countries that it has a relationship which could have been very good what in your opinion should be done to fix this mistrust to boost the real. we should learn to talk to each other not past each other i think there are nor the shortcuts to face i think the best way of fixing mistrust between two individuals talk openly with each other roll up your sleeves and talked create you not just be your diplomacy in dying doesn't cut how do you see pakistan's relations developing with the united states in the next year now that barack obama is known that is staying in the president's speech i don't think it would make a dramatic difference to the relationship if barbara obama is coming back or
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the republicans had come back there is the c.d.s. mistrust between our two countries is very unfortunate because you know i have lived in america and the american people are very good very nice people but there is no mistrust between the two governments and that's fine he said thank you very much for your time this was a stance former ambassador to the u.s. and the former national security advisor to the pakistani prime minister mr mahmud ali durrani. do we speak your language of the will or not a day of. school music programs and documentaries and spanish more matters to you breaking news a little tonnage of angles couldn't stories. you hear. that
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troy all teach spanish find out more visit. more news today violence has once again flared up the film these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. giant corporations are the day. secret laboratory to mccurry was able to build a new most sophisticated robot which all unfortunately doesn't give a darn about anything turns mission to teach music creation why it should care
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